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Friday, June 22, 2018

Cedar Key Lighthouse

Cedar Key Lighthouse, Florida, Photo by Marilyn Turk

By Marilyn Turk *Comment at the end for a chance to win a book.

As other authors on this blog have noted, one of the best perks of being a historical writer is being
able to visit the places in the story. Although the research is interesting on
the internet from the chair in my office, it pales in comparison to seeing a
place firsthand.

My series, Coastal Lights Legacy, is set near four different
lighthouses on the coast of Florida. Each book takes place during significant
events that occurred near or in each lighthouse. The lighthouses are the St.
George Island Light during the Civil War, the Cedar Key light after
Reconstruction, the St. Augustine Light a few years after the Civil War and the
Pensacola Lighthouse during Reconstruction. Naturally, I had to visit each
lighthouse to see firsthand what the area was like.

Of course, I couldn’t go back in time, but some things have
remained since the 1800’s, the lighthouses, for one. Fortunately, I live in
Florida, so these places aren’t too far away for me to visit.

This month, the second book in the series, Revealing Light, was released. Set in
Cedar Key, Florida, the story happens shortly after the occupying Union troops
left and southerners began to take back control of their state. My main
character, Sally Rose McFarlane, who was born at the end of Rebel Light, goes to Cedar Key as a
governess to teach the children of a successful town lawyer. However, Sally
Rose has a secret she must hide in the changing environment of the area. That’s
all I’m going to tell you, so I won’t spoil your reading of the book!

The town of Cedar Key is on the largest island in a cluster
of islands known as the “cedar keys” in the Big Bend area of Florida, on the
west coast. Also known as The Forgotten Coast, the area is home to places once
significant or popular in Florida, but “forgotten” when interstates and
progress diverted traffic. Since the Cedar Key Lighthouse is significant in Revealing Light, I had to go see it,
right? But that is more easily said than done because the 1854 lighthouse is on
an island called Seahorse Key about three miles from Cedar Key. In addition,
the island is leased by the University of Florida as a marine lab that houses a
dozen or so students in the lighthouse building several times of the year.
What’s more, the island is only open to the public twice a year when the
lighthouse has a special open house. Otherwise, the island is
off-limits to the public due to its protected status as a nesting area for over
200 species of birds.

It just so happened that when I planned to visit Cedar
Key,the island was not open to the public. So, to go to the
lighthouse, I needed special permission from the university’s director of the
marine lab. I contacted the director, and in what I believe is a God-wink, the
director allowed me to go so I could do research for my book. Since I didn’t have
transportation, he even provided that for me. I met the island caretaker at
a boat dock in Cedar Key, and he took me to Seahorse Key.

What an amazing experience to view this uncivilized area
through my character’s eyes! The caretaker proved to be an invaluable source of information as he pointed out
various special features on the island, such as a small cemetery where Civil War sailors are buried and a hidden cistern within the lighthouse building itself.

General Zachary Taylor proposed the lighthouse on the island
in 1850 due to its unique height above all the surrounding islands and the
heavy commercial traffic in the area. However, it was General George Meade who designed
the lighthouse that provided guidance to vessels transporting Florida’s red cedar
to the two Cedar Key pencil factories.

By the late 1800’s, the area’s resources had been depleted, and with a new railroad built to Tampa, business
shifted south. When an 1896 hurricane wiped out the majority of the commercial
buildings, the area economy was lost. In 1915, the light was
extinguished, and in 1929, President Herbert Hoover created the Cedar Keys National
Wildlife Refuge reserving three of the keys (islands) as bird sanctuaries.

On my trip to Seahorse Key, I had the opportunity to climb the
spiral stairs of the lighthouse and step out on the gallery where I could see
for miles—islands and water galore—the same sights the characters in Revealing
Light saw. During my visit, I also saw shoreline trees filled with so
many birds on nests, they looked like flowers. Hearing their symphony of
nesting coos was amazing, accompanied only by the splashing of the waves on the
beach. I wonder if Sally Rose heard that too?

Guess you’ll have to read Revealing Light to find out.

Leave a comment and your email address below for a drawing
to win a copy!

Marilyn Turk
writes historical fiction set on the coast. The
Gilded Curse, a World War II novel, published in 2016, won a Silver Scroll
award and its sequel, Shadowed by a Spy,
will be out in July 2018. Rebel Light
was the first book of her Coastal Lights Legacy novels which feature stories
with lighthouse settings. The second book in the series, Revealing Light, will be published in 2018. In addition, Marilyn’s
novella, The Wrong Survivor, will be
in a collection called Great Lakes
Lighthouse Brides coming out in November 2018. She has also written a book
of devotions called Lighthouse Devotions.
She blogs about lighthouses and writing on her website @ http://pathwayheart.com.
In addition to climbing lighthouses, Marilyn enjoys boating, fishing, tennis,
and gardening.

What a wonderfully informative post. I love history and don't know much about lighthouses. I can't wait to read Revealing Light. Visiting lighthouses sounds fun. Thanks for the giveaway opportunity and good luck everyone. princessdebbie1_2000(at)yahoo(dot)com

congratulations. how wonderful that you were able to get the tour and help with your research. that was so generous of them. your book sounds wonderful. thanks for the generous give a wayquilting dash lady at comcast dot net

These books sound fabulous. I love lighthouses and every books I've ever read set in one. I love your description of your visit to Seahorse Island. How special to be able to go at a time when it was closed to the public. I'm sure you were able to see a lot more than if you had been there during one of their public days. Thank you for the chance to win a copy of your book.

Marilyn, your Coastal Lights Legacy series sounds wonderful! I have added it to my TBR list :) I love lighthouses! How wonderful for you to get a private tour of the Cedar Key Lightouse! That must have been amazing!! Thank you for this fascinating post and the chance to win a cop of 'Revealing Light'! ~Alison Boss

Hi Alison. Yes, it was wonderful, and I've recently found out that the management of the island has changed hands, even though the university still uses it. So I might not be able to get that opportunity these days. You're entered in the contest.

Marilyn, what an amazing God we serve with your prayer being answered to view the lighthouse when it wasn't open to the public. I'm looking forward to reading The Revealing Light since I've read your Rebel Light and enjoyed it so much. Blessings as you continue writing. marilynridgway78[at]gmail[dot]com

Thanks, Marilyn. I appreciate your support and glad you liked Rebel Light. Now that I've learned that the management of the island has changed hands, I realize even more how special my opportunity was.

Thanks for all the wonderful research you do when writing a book. I love that you were able to view the lighthouse and surrounding area without the backdrop of many other people. I'm sure it made it much easier to imagine what it would have been like those many years ago. Thanks for the giveaway! bettimaceATgmailDOTcom

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